Northrop Grumman's Global Hawk Unmanned Aircraft deploys worldwide
Northrop Grumman Corporation and the US Air Force commemorated the milestone deployment of the first RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned aircraft system (UAS) to Pacific Command (PACOM) with an arrival ceremony Sept. 20 at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam. Designated AF-20, the aircraft landed successfully Sept. 1 after an 18-hour flight from its main operating base at Beale Air Force Base, Calif.
"We believe that an intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) capability within the Pacific theater meets the needs of US Air Force operations and will help the US and its partners and allies address common regional challenges such as humanitarian assistance, disaster relief, terrorism, and piracy," said Gen. Gary L. North, commander of the Pacific Air Forces and Air Component for US PACOM. "Having the Global Hawk in the Pacific encourages a dialogue for regional cooperation, security and stability in this region."
The historical landing in Guam not only signified the stand-up of a new forward-operating location and first permanent overseas basing of the high-altitude, long-endurance UAS, but it also marked the 45,000th flight hour for the Global Hawk program. In addition to PACOM, Global Hawk has also been forward-deployed to European Command, or EUCOM, forces at Naval Air Station Sigonella, Italy, where another Block 30 Global Hawk, designated AF-15, arrived Sept. 15. Block 30 Global Hawks will be based at both Sigonella and Andersen and will be operational in early 2011.
"These remarkable accomplishments demonstrate why we refer to 2010 as the year of Global Hawk," said Duke Dufresne, sector vice president and general manager of the Strike and Surveillance Systems Division for Northrop Grumman's Aerospace Systems sector. "Global Hawk will now be covering nearly every part of the globe, thanks to the dedication and efforts of the entire military and industry team. The Global Hawks are not only combat-proven with more than 35,000 combat hours, but they have also been employed this year during the Haiti earthquake in January and during several Atlantic and Pacific hurricanes in August and September."
Cruising at extremely high altitudes and above ordinary, commercial traffic, the RQ-4 Global Hawk can survey large geographic areas with pinpoint accuracy, giving government and military decision-makers the most current information available during a crisis or contingency situation and providing them with near real-time, high-resolution ISR imagery that can support full-spectrum operations.
Source: Northrop Grumman
More from Uncrewed Vehicles
-
Cummings Aerospace showcases Hellhound loitering munition designed for US Army’s LASSO programme (video)
Cummings Aerospace presented its turbojet-powered Hellhound loitering munition at SOF Week 2025, offering a man-portable solution aligned with the US Army’s LASSO requirements.
-
SOF Week 2025: PDW unveils attritable FPV drone for SOF operations at scale
PDW has revealed its Attritable Multirotor First Person View drone at SOF Week 2025, offering special operations forces a low-cost, rapidly deployable platform for strike and ISR missions, inspired by battlefield lessons from Ukraine.
-
SOF Week 2025: Teledyne FLIR white paper provides guidance on reusable loitering munitions
Teledyne FLIR is highlighting the emerging requirements for 'recoverable and re-usable' loitering munitions across the contemporary operating environment during this week’s SOF Week conference in Tampa, Florida.
-
SOF Week 2025: Kraken Technology group debuts K3 Scout USV in North America
High-performance maritime industry player Kraken Technology Group, based in the UK, has used the SOF Week conference in Tampa, Florida this week to debut its K3 Scout uncrewed surface vessel (USV) to the North American market.
-
Palladyne AI and Red Cat to demonstrate capabilities for autonomous drone swarms to the US military
Red Cat and Palladyne AI recently conducted a cross-platform collaborative flight involving three diverse heterogeneous drones.
-
Jammer resistant drone designs spark search for countermeasures
The Russia-Ukraine conflict has driven another stage of evolution for drones and the counter measures to defend against them.